When I was in 7th grade, my science teacher tried to explain to us the concept of heat. I didn't really pay attention because, proud as I was, I thought I got it. Heat. Easy. I feel it everyday. Hey, I'm a human; I make heat everyday.
In reality, heat is determined by the concentration and movement of molecules in a space. It is a complicate process which has to do with speed and size and pressure but, for 7th graders, it can be simplified into two statements. As molecules become closer together, the space warms up. As they spread, it cools.
Regardless of my obviously Einstein-level knowledge of the abstract subject, my teacher asked a dozen students and me to help in a demonstration. In the front of the room, she had outlined two boxes in blue tape, one about a quarter the size of the other. The twelve of us would represent molecules.
First, she had the group of us stand in the smaller box. This is hot-she told us. The twelve of us awkwardly rubbed shoulders in a space obviously designed to hold 6. I remember feeling trapped, unable to move or turn. Plus, being so close to so many people made me not want to do either. Hot was limiting.
Happily, we moved to the larger box, which our teacher called "cold." In this box, I could move freely in whichever direction I chose. Wanting to share the freedom of cold with someone, I scanned the box for the eyes of my friend. Free herself, my friend was facing away from me, unaware and uninterested in what was happening on the other side of the box. Cold was lonely.
I think about this experiment a lot. Each box, each temperature, seemed so ineffective to me.
To be hot, to trap all of yourself in one small space, eliminates the possibility of growth. It gets gross after awhile, all that staying in the same place, all that looking at and smelling and hearing the same things.
But, to be cold is just as bad. In the cold, you are too far apart, too unable to focus on any specific spot. It makes me shiver to think about it- having so much space to run but no one close enough to share it with, so many things to do with no passion for any of it.
I know, in between there is a temperature which allows for growth and loyalty, though I fear I am far from finding it. When I do, I will know because I will shed myself of the AC and the thick sweatshirts and the other things which helped me adjust my temperature when wherever I was felt wrong. I will know because it will allow me to help a lot of people and help them well. It will show me new and different things but remain loyal to them as I move on. It will be comfortable.